Claudio Gnoli


Glad to communicate with you. My full name is Claudio Tommaso Gnoli, and this is my personal web page. I work as a librarian, make some research in knowledge organization, teach courses, and am active in some professional associations. I live in North-Western Italy. In case you are curious, some personal notes are also available.


Contacts: You are welcome to write for any reason to  gnoli@aib.it — just consider that I receive much mail, so it can take some days to be answered. I can speak English, French, or Italian, and read some Spanish. A FOAF reference to me is available. I don't subscribe to closed social networks because I prefer universal e-mail and public Web (I am experimenting with Twitter).

(Se ch'l'é, ingléz?!)


Background

I have a mixed humanist-scientific background, as I went to a classical high school, then took a degree in Natural Sciences in 1994. My main interests in the latter field have been evolutionary theory and animal behaviour, and the degree thesis concerned communication among Eurasian otters (Lutra lutra). In the subsequent years I kept working together with researchers in zoology at the University of Pavia and the Natural History Museum of Milan: we studied the local distribution and behavioural ecology of squirrels, wolves, and badgers. Together with some friends I founded "Vertebrati", an Italian e-mail discussion group devoted to wildlife biology, which has been positively active since 1999.


"A student was called on to take the chair at a dinner in connection with the Royal School of Mines. [... Professor Thomas Huxley asked:] "Which of the lines of science you have followed has chiefly engaged your interest?" Following the thread of my reply, he drew from me the confession that an interest in philosophy, and in the general scheme of things, lay deeper than my interest in the practical applications of science to what then purported to my bread-and-butter training." (Conwy Lloyd Morgan, Emergent evolution)
Having shifted to libraries, I have learned a lot from the editorial staff of the early AIB website, especially its coordinators Eugenio Gatto and Riccardo Ridi. Later, ISKO people have been encouraging to get in contact with the international knowledge organization community, and Roberto Poli has introduced me into philosophical ontology. In turn, I think I have contributed to the involvement in LIS and KO activities of skilled people like Caterina Barazia, Emanuela Casson, Enzo Cesanelli, Giovanna Frigimelica, Hong Mei, and Irene Scaturro.


Position

I started working as a librarian in May 1994 at the municipal library of Mariano Comense. Shortly after, I earned a position at the University of Milan, and spent six years at the front desk of the agriculture faculty library. In December 2000 I moved to the University of Pavia mathematics library, where I am currently working.


Research

(Most links point to subsets of my publications.)

My main interest is knowledge organization (KO), as it has been developing since the end of 19th century especially in libraries, but can also be applied to any other knowledge source, including the huge ones available today through the Internet. I have written introductory papers or chapters on KO in general, and the different types of KO systems and structures, both in English and in Italian.

My favourite KO systems are faceted classifications, as conceived by S.R. Ranganathan and developed by the Classification Research Group (CRG): they are rich and powerful tools, though not so largely exploited yet (what computer people call "facets" tend to be only partial implementations). My involvement in updating the venerable Universal Decimal Classification goes in this faceting direction.

Some CRG members, especially DJ Foskett and Derek Austin, also explored the possibility of a general, freely-faceted classification based on the theory of integrative levels. This is where I mostly try to produce some original contributions, at several interconnected layers:

  • examining ontological views, especially emergent evolutionism, the theory of levels of reality and the general systems theory, as philosophical foundations for KO, in both existing and new systems;
  • exploring how both common origin (phylogeny) and similarity (morphology) can be modeled in KO systems to represent relationships between phenomena;
  • emphasizing the potential of a classification by phenomena, as opposed to disciplines, for KO and interdisciplinary research, as expressed in the León Manifesto;
  • developing and testing a classification flavour called freely faceted, allowing to combine any concept with any other one independently from disciplinary context. To this purpose I work together with other people in the ILC project.

Libraries and their online catalogues (OPACs) are one traditional, important service where KO should be applied, though not the only one: a great place for this is the Internet itself, especially in the new perspective of linked data and the Semantic Web.

I am also interested in other (probably too many) fields, such as artificial languages, dialects, ethnomusicology...

I have published some books and a number of papers, that are listed by me and by Google Citation.


Teaching

I have done tens of short courses for librarians, master students etc., concerning strategies in searching information in the Internet, online public access catalogues, library websites, subject indexing and its application to the digital environment. At present my courses mostly concern:

  • the history and theory of library classification
  • faceted classification
  • subject indexing in online catalogues and directories
  • knowledge organization systems from Dewey to the Semantic Web


Pool activity

  • ISKO: International Society for Knowledge Organization

  • UDCC : Universal Decimal Classification Consortium
    • 2007-: member of advisory board
    • 2008-: responsible for revision plan of class Philosophy
    • 2010-2012: associate editor

  • SRELS: Sarada Ranganathan Endowment for Library Science

  • NKOS: Networked Knowkedge Organization Systems/Services
    • 2008-: participant

  • AIB: Associazione italiana biblioteche
    • 1998-: member
    • 1999-2008: member of web editorial board
    • 1999-2008: assistant co-ordinator of directory of Italian OPACs
    • 2000-2008: editor in chief of "AIB-WEB. Contributi "
    • 2008-: member of GRIS: Research group on Subject indexing

  • AIDA: Associazione italiana per la documentazione avanzata



Personal notes

Mentre la moglie apriva le tende, Maigret, seduto in mezzo al letto, sorseggiava il suo caffè e si sforzava di vedere oltre i vetri velati di tulle.
«Piove ancora?»
«No. Ma da come camminano tutti con i pugni in tasca, non è ancora primavera, nonostante il calendario...».
Era il 19 marzo. Un mercoledì.

[Georges Simenon, Maigret et le tueur, 1969]

Books have always been around me since I was a child, and I soon realized that a basic question was which ones to read... When I was 7 years old, my grand-father Giulio Gnoli wrote that I had "a need for order, organization, almost cataloguing, of documentation", so that I was often "writing, making lists, establishing a precise sequence between persons and between facts, pretending to own large books where news and details could be searched for"... It is a weird fate that my great-great-grandfather, my great-grandfather, my great-aunt, and my mother have also been librarians. I am pleased that my work contributes to the diffusion and use of knowledge, a cause without owners nor flag.

Though having been born in a frantic anonymous city, I feel much more bound to my mother's region, at the boundary between Pavia plain and the valleys of the Northern Apennine. The latter, also known as the Quattro Province, despite depopulation keep a remarkable heritage of traditions, including high-level folk music. I often find rural communities to be much more civilized and deep than urban ones. Maybe I am able to understand both thanks to my half-cast background (mez e mez, "grey area", as they say in our village).

I collect some images of me and individual people and places important to me. As for general classes of things I like, they include (in order of integrative levels) silence, rivers, forests, wolverines, cats, red-haired women, phonology of languages and dialects, logical languages, dining with good company, smoking pipe, friendship, peaceful attitude, open-minded people, independence, pluralism, degrowth, the Internet, hiking, reading, world-class rallies, folk music and dances, art films, epistemological realism, humanism. I belong to the party of those who go out to vote, and the religion of those who do not want to destroy other religions. Though not as football addict as many Italians, I support Sampdoria and secondarily Barcelona.

I am a volunteer blood donor at AVIS, and encourage you to do the same as there is a big need for it!

 

 

 

 


 

 

«...Di' Scritur, ma t'é muntà ra testa, che ta scriv in ingléz o cul ch'l'é?!»

«Ma no, l'é che ra gent ch'a gh'piaz i stesi rob che mi j en mìa tant, e si ta spet da truvai sul in Itàllia, ta pö spetà un bel toch...»

«Va be', e alura j amiz da chì?»

«Par parlà con cuei lì a s' fa prima a veghse, o no?...»

Claudio Gnoli — <http://www-dimat.unipv.it/gnoli/> : 2003.07 - 2012.05 -
« Claudio Gnoli's personal web site — Yahoo!-Geocities : 1998.07-2003.10